India Panic Grows With Number of Plague Cases : Health: Officials say the epidemic is under control. But citizens and other nations are skeptical.

NEW DELHI — The nurses do not dare enter Ward No. 7 at the Infectious Diseases Hospital where S.K. Tyagi is now confined. The equally fearful orderlies leave his food at the door instead of carrying it to his bed.

The 26-year-old Indian accountant, along with 107 other suspected plague victims in New Delhi, has been assigned to a hospital that is supposed to be expert in treating the dreaded disease. But he has quickly grown dubious.

"Dr. Singhal is the only person who is handling the cases," Tyagi said Friday as he sat on his unkempt bed in the dim ward with dirty yellow walls, his mouth and nose covered with a paper mask to prevent him from transmitting the deadly bacillus by coughing or sneezing. "Nurses don't come here; they're scared they'll get the plague."

The 150-bed hospital's harried medical superintendent, Dr. Ram Chandra Panda, used one word to describe India's general reaction to the recent outbreaks of bubonic and pneumonic plague: "phobia."

"It's under control," the doctor maintained Friday.

But across India, ordinary citizens, politicians and even medical personnel are showing by their actions that they do not believe such assurances.

Abroad, many countries have begun treating India as a public health pariah by banning travel to and from there or requiring incoming passengers from Bombay or New Delhi to submit to special health checks.

"There is some overreacting," said Dr. Narayan K. Shah, representative of the World Health Organization in India.

On Thursday, the U.S. State Department said the risk of plague infection for international travelers is low. But at Los Angeles International Airport, federal health officers began handing out warnings to passengers arriving from India to watch for signs that they may have been exposed to the disease.

Ten days after a pneumonic plague epidemic began killing people in the industrial city of Surat in western India, the New Delhi-based National Institute of Communicable Diseases reported a total of 2,171 suspected plague cases nationwide from Surat to Calcutta, 1,000 miles away.

The government institute's control room said there had been 45 deaths, but was apparently not aware of an 18-year-old man and a 5-year-old boy in New Delhi who the Health Ministry on Friday confirmed had succumbed to plague at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences.

Those two deaths were the farthest yet from the diamond-cutting and artificial-silk weaving center of Surat, 560 miles southwest of Delhi.

Although a vaccine and an antibiotic cure exist, few illnesses can match the plague for the atavistic reaction of fright that it produces. Though the number of suspected cases rose by more than 600 in the 24-hour period ending at 5 p.m. Friday, Shah said the progression was slow enough so he could predict that India's first large-scale outbreak of plague in 28 years will have subsided within three or four weeks.

"There's nothing to panic about," Shah said. "First the number of cases will rise, and then it will go down. This epidemic will go away."

But in New Delhi, the capital's wary leaders ordered schools and movie theaters closed effective Friday as a way of minimizing transmission through public contact. Schools had been scheduled to close Oct. 5 anyway for Hindu religious holidays.

The New Delhi government also arranged for 500 more beds at a hospital usually used for victims of tuberculosis, and Chief Minister Madan Lal Khurana ordered the members of his Cabinet to personally supervise a crash cleanup effort.

WHO's Shah said the emergency campaign to rid chronically filthy neighborhoods of rotting piles of garbage was not necessary on purely epidemiological grounds. The pneumonic strain of the plague, believed to have been spread by people fleeing from Surat, is transmitted by coughing, sneezing and human sputum, he said, unlike the better-known bubonic variety, which is transmitted by fleas that live on infected rats.

Of greater concern to health professionals is how the suspected plague sufferers in Delhi, 21 of whom have been proven so far to have the disease, contracted it.

More than half are not from Surat or the nearby state of Maharashtra, home to a separate epidemic of bubonic plague that broke out in early August.

To track down carriers of the bacillus, booths staffed by doctors have been set up at Delhi's railway stations and bus terminal to look for people with coughs and fevers who are coming from Surat or Bombay, Maharashtra's capital.

But conversations with Tyagi and his bedmates in Ward No. 7 showed how late authorities were in reacting.

Tyagi, who kept the books at a Surat iron foundry, was able to catch the train to Delhi from the plague-stricken industrial city Sunday. It was only the following day, he said, that police began to ask people streaming out of Surat where they intended to go.